
Contents
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African American Women as Early, Critical, and Enduring Obama Supporters African American Women as Early, Critical, and Enduring Obama Supporters
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African American Women and the Policy Responsiveness of the Obama Administration African American Women and the Policy Responsiveness of the Obama Administration
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If Not the Policies, Perhaps the Bodies? African American Women’s Descriptive Representation in the Obama Administration If Not the Policies, Perhaps the Bodies? African American Women’s Descriptive Representation in the Obama Administration
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African American Women and Obama Cabinet-Level and Presidential Advisory Positions African American Women and Obama Cabinet-Level and Presidential Advisory Positions
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African American Women and the Judiciary African American Women and the Judiciary
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Demanding Intersectional Responsiveness: African American Women’s Response to Obama’s Inclusionary Dilemma Demanding Intersectional Responsiveness: African American Women’s Response to Obama’s Inclusionary Dilemma
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Post-Obama Era Black Women’s Politics—Study and Practice Post-Obama Era Black Women’s Politics—Study and Practice
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Notes Notes
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5 Obama, African American Women, and the Limitations of the Politics of Recognition
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Published:February 2021
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Abstract
In this chapter, I examine if African American women benefitted from their support of the Obama presidency by using traditional markers of group interests, especially as a key constituency group supporting candidate Obama. I explore the Obama presidency, asking beyond the politics of recognition, Did American women receive the attention from the president that their numbers as voters and early supporters of his presidential run might suggest? If not, why? I explore these questions from four different perspectives. First, I center African American women as the key constituency group that accounted for Obama’s electoral successes and situate what traditionally emerges when groups bear that designation in electoral politics. Second, I examine a range of policy interventions the administration pursued that might have addressed the specific needs of African American women as a distinct group. Third, I explore African American women’s descriptive representation under the Obama administration and whether the Obama administration created unique opportunities for African American women as decision makers in the administration. Finally, I argue that Obama’s failures to adequately address African American women as a critical constituency is explained by critical disconnections in his relationship to Black women.
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